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THE BENEFITS OF A GOOD WORK-LIFE BALANCE

For UNISON members, striking a better balance might enable:

• Parents and carers to support their dependants better
• More disabled people to access work
• More people to return to education or study
• Others to take up interests outside work
• People to be more active in their community

Employers also benefit from new working patterns:

• Improved recruitment and retention
• Reduced absenteeism
• Improved morale and productivity
• Improved services to customers

USEFUL LINKS

Department for Trade and Industry
The official government site, with information on Challenge Funding for those interested in developing work-life balance policies.

The Work Life Research Centre
Great deal of general information on work-life balance and flexible working, including legal advice and ideas on campaigning.

Employers for Work-life Balance
For an employers’ perspective this site is worth a look.

Home life undermined by work pressures? Thinking about starting a family? Need time off to study? Struggling with childcare commitments? Then a better work-life balance could be just what you need

The balancing act

Getting the right balance between work and home life is vitally important. Working excessively long hours is linked to ill health, stress and low productivity and is one of the major barriers to women’s advancement.

And with an ageing workforce, more jobs being created for women and decreased job security, a better work-life balance is becoming a must. People are demanding and expecting working practices that address their needs within the context of a new century.

Last month the government announced a £4.8m work-life balance package to be dished out to 233 companies employing more than 830,000 people throughout the UK. The so-called Challenge Fund will help employees and employers adopt more flexible work practices such as job-sharing and telecommuting.

Some organisations are also reviewing working hours in order to curb ‘presenteeism’ or a long hours culture and introducing flexitime, compressed working weeks, job-sharing, annualised hours, teleworking and term-time working.

But research suggests only around half of employees currently have the opportunity of any type of flexible working arrangement. Only a third have access to a flexitime scheme and less than a fifth have the option to job-share.

Gradually, though, we are seeing signs of progress. The Work-Life Balance project at Rochdale Council began in October 2000. A small steering group was set up which included the UNISON branch secretary. Pilot projects have been developed, which are specific to the needs of each service and the staff within it.

The focus is on addressing the work-life balance needs of all employees within the team. Teams have the choice of applying work-life balance options which include: flexible working hours; compressed hours; or working at home. Most have simply introduced more flexible working hours with less rules.

And at Nottingham Trent University, UNISON successfully submitted a bid to the Challenge Fund to address recruitment and retention issues. The project is being piloted in a single faculty along with a central department. All staff, both academic and support staff, are taking part in the exercise and it is hoped to roll it out to the rest of the university after completing the first phase.

The main issues to emerge were around child care, care for elderly relatives, staff not valued, insufficient time for home activities and staff not being able to take their full holiday entitlement because of workload. The project is continuing.

More on UNISON’s work-life balance campaign at:
Link to another page on this sitewww.unison.org.uk/worklifebalance

Kieran Wyatt
k.wyatt@unison.co.uk

UNISON’S WORK-LIFE BALANCE SURVEY

UNISON has teamed up with the Labour Research Department to develop a work-life balance survey and compile an accurate picture of work-life balance practices.

“There are lots of things said by the government, employers, and managers about work-life balance,” says Ross Hendry, UNISON’s work-life balance campaign policy officer.

“Some of it is true and a lot based on guess work. But the work UNISON is now doing will be based on fact – what workers have experienced, what our members are saying, and what our branches are doing. This questionaire is an important building block in putting together that picture.”

Link to a document on this siteDownload the work-life balance questionnaire (PDF, 48k).

Please return to the Labour Research Department by Friday 16 August 2002 to Labour Research Department, FREEPOST, 78 Blackfriars Road, London, SE1 8YX.

The results will help UNISON determine what the real issues are in the public sector and what type of material people need to negotiate a better work-life balance deal in the workplace.

To read Acrobat PDF files you need Acrobat Reader software, which is available free of charge from the Link to an external websiteAdobe website in both PC and Mac format.

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